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Dec. 9, 2025, 11:27 PM ESTBy Evan BushAfter a string of poisonings from “death cap” mushrooms — one of them fatal — California health officials are urging residents not to eat any foraged mushrooms unless they are trained experts. Doctors in the San Francisco Bay Area have blamed the wild mushroom, also called Amanita phalloides, for 23 poisoning cases reported to the California Poison Control System since Nov. 18, according to Dr. Craig Smollin, medical director for the system’s San Francisco division.“All of these patients were involved with independently foraging the mushrooms from the wild,” Smollin, who is a professor of emergency medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, said at a news conference Tuesday. “They all developed symptoms within the first 24 hours, including nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and abdominal pain.” Smollin said some of the patients were parts of cohorts that had consumed the same batch of foraged mushrooms. The largest group was about seven people, he said. All of the patients were hospitalized, at least briefly. One died. Five remain in hospital care. One has received a liver transplant, and another is on a donation list awaiting a transplant, Smollin said. The patients are 1½ to 56 years old. Mushroom collectors said death cap mushrooms are more prevalent in parts of California this season than in years past, which could be driving the increase in poisonings. “Any mushroom has years that it’s prolific and years that it is not. … It’s having a very good season,” said Mike McCurdy, president of the Mycological Society of San Francisco. He added that the death cap was one of the top two species he identified during an organized group hunt for fungi last week, called a foray. In a news release, Dr. Erica Pan, California’s state public health officer, warned that “because the death cap can easily be mistaken for edible safe mushrooms, we advise the public not to forage for wild mushrooms at all during this high-risk season.”Dr. Cyrus Rangan, a pediatrician and medical toxicologist with the California Poison Control System, said the “blanket warning” is needed because most people do not have the expertise to identify which mushrooms are safe to eat.Still, he said, “it’s rare to see a case series like this.”The California Poison Control System said in a news release that some of the affected patients speak Spanish and might be relying on foraging practices honed outside the United States. Death cap mushrooms look similar to other species in the Amanita genus that are commonly eaten in Central American countries, according to Heather Hallen-Adams, the toxicology chair of the North American Mycological Association. Because death caps are not often found in that region, foragers might not realize the potential risk of lookalikes in California, she said. Anne Pringle, a professor of mycology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, said there is a litany of poisoning cases in which people misidentify something because their experience is not relevant to a new region: “That’s a story that comes up over and over again.”An Amanita phalloides mushroom in Hungary. The species originated in Europe and is invasive in the U.S. Anne PringleOver the past 10 years, mushroom foraging has boomed in the Bay Area and other parts of the country. At the same time, information resources about mushroom toxicity — reliable and otherwise — have proliferated, as well, including on social media, phone apps and artificial intelligence platforms. Experts said those sources should be viewed with skepticism. Longtime mushroom hunters maintain that the practice can be done safely. McCurdy, who has collected and identified mushrooms since the 1970s, said he bristled at the broad discouragement of foraging. “No, that’s ridiculous. … After an incident like this, their first instinct is to say don’t forage,” he said. “Experienced mushroom collectors won’t pay any attention to that.” But McCurdy suggested that people seek expertise from local mycological societies, which are common in California, and think critically about the sources of information their lives may be relying on. Pringle and McCurdy both said they have seen phone apps and social media forums misidentify mushrooms. “I have seen AI-generated guidebooks that are dangerous,” Pringle said.The death cap is an invasive species that originated in Europe and came to California in the 1930s, most likely with imported nursery trees. The mushroom is usually a few inches tall with white gills, a pale yellow or green cap and often a ring around the base of its stalk. The species is found across the West Coast and the Eastern Seaboard, as well as in Florida and Texas, according to Hallen-Adams, who is also an associate professor of food science at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. In California, it typically grows near oak trees, though occasionally pines, too. The mushroom’s body is typically connected to tree roots and grows in a symbiotic relationship with them. The toxin in death cap mushrooms, called amatoxin, can damage the kidneys, liver and gastrointestinal tract if it is ingested. It disrupts the transcription of genetic code and the production of proteins, which can lead to cell death.Hallen-Adams said the U.S. Poison Centers average about 52 calls involving amatoxin each year, but “a lot of things don’t get called into poison centers — take that with a grain of salt.” Amatoxin poisoning is not the most common type from mushrooms, but it is the most dangerous, she added: “90% of lethal poisonings worldwide are going to be amatoxin.” It takes remarkably little to sicken a person.“One cubic centimeter of a mushroom ingested could be a fatal dose,” Hallen-Adams said. Symptoms of amatoxin poisoning often develop within several hours, then improve before they worsen. There is no standard set of medical interventions that doctors rely on. “It’s a very difficult mushroom to test for,” Rangan said, and “also very difficult to treat.”One drug that doctors have leaned on to treat some of the California patients — called silibinin — is still experimental and difficult to obtain.“All of our silibinin comes from Europe,” Hallen-Adams said. Death cap mushrooms have continued to grow abundantly since their introduction, and Pringle’s research has shown that the species can reproduce bisexually and unisexually — with a mate or by itself, alone — which gives it an evolutionary advantage. “If Eve can make more of herself, she doesn’t need Adam,” Pringle said. “One of the things I’m really interested in is how you might stop the invasion, how you might cure a habitat of its death caps. And I have no solutions to offer you at the moment.” Evan BushEvan Bush is a science reporter for NBC News.

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After a string of poisonings from “death cap” mushrooms — one fatal — California health officials are urging residents not to eat any foraged mushrooms.



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Dec. 9, 2025, 5:27 PM ESTBy Rebecca KeeganFor a company at the center of a chaotic battle over the future of Hollywood, Warner Bros. Discovery had a pretty good Monday.The media conglomerate’s film “One Battle After Another” and TV show “The White Lotus” collected the most Golden Globe nominations in their categories. Another of its movies, “Sinners,” also fared well, earning seven nominations.But the studio did not have much time to celebrate. Just as actors Marlon Wayans and Skye P. Marshall were calling the names of Golden Globe nominees at a news conference at the Beverly Hilton, Paramount launched a hostile takeover bid for WBD valued at more than $108 billion.WBD’s board and shareholders are weighing competing offers for the studio from Netflix and Paramount. Meanwhile, voters in Hollywood are beginning their deliberations as award season ramps up. Many of the seven Hollywood insiders NBC News spoke with — including producers, marketers and former studio executives — said the looming media merger will shape votes for upcoming awards shows, including the Directors Guild Awards, the Screen Actors Guild Awards and the coveted Academy Awards.“This deal is an emotional piece of news for a lot of people,” said “Silence of the Lambs” producer Edward Saxon, a voting member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and chair of the producing program at the University of Southern California’s film school. “There’s worry about consolidation and about the future of theatrical. The feeling is I don’t get a vote on so much of what’s happening in the industry right now. If I do have a vote on something, I’m going to vote against consolidation.”Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav; Paramount Skydance CEO David Ellison; Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos. JC Olivera / Kyle Grillot / Getty ImagesMonths of speculation about the future of WBD came to a head last week. On Friday, WBD’s board agreed to sell the company’s film, TV and streaming assets to Netflix for $82.7 billion, sparking a backlash from Hollywood guilds, movie theater owners and politicians on both sides of the aisle over a deal they say would harm workers and consumers.The deal came as something of a surprise. Paramount had been linked to WBD since September, and Netflix co-CEO Greg Peters had publicly downplayed Netflix’s interest.Some academy members say the possibility of Netflix’s owning Warner Bros., one of the last five traditional movie studios in Hollywood, is cementing their aversion to its business model.“There isn’t any love lost for Netflix in the industry right now,” said a veteran academy member who requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue. “The industry feels like they’re a TV company masquerading as a film company.” In a conference call with investors and the media Friday, co-CEO Ted Sarandos said that Netflix has no “opposition to movies in theaters” and that it would uphold Warner Bros.’ existing theatrical agreements. But he also said that “over time the [theatrical] windows will evolve.”On Monday, Netflix was hit with a consumer lawsuit seeking to block the WBD acquisition on the grounds that it threatens to reduce competition. “We believe this suit is meritless and is merely an attempt by the plaintiffs bar to leverage all the attention on the deal,” a Netflix spokesperson said. Netflix has released 10 best picture nominees in its history, beginning with Alfonso Cuarón’s “Roma” in 2019, but it has never won the film industry’s biggest prize, in part because of an industry perception that its business model has contributed to the decline of the theatrical movie business. 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And the heads of the film studio [Mike De Luca and Pam Abdy] are well-loved.”In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter about his film’s seven Golden Globe nominations Monday, Coogler answered a question about the pending WBD deal by saying, “Theatrical releases mean everything to me,” a diplomatic way of signaling worry about a Netflix deal.Paramount and Netflix will face regulatory hurdles if their offer prevails. Paramount has consistently touted its close ties to the White House as an advantage over other bidders, and, according to Securities and Exchange Commission filings, some of its financial backing for the deal comes from Affinity Partners, an investment firm founded by Jared Kushner, President Donald Trump’s son-in-law. Paramount has less of a stake in this year’s awards race, apart from “Mission: Impossible—The Final Reckoning,” which is likely to contend in technical categories like sound and visual effects at the Oscars. But the studio owns CBS and Paramount+, which next month will broadcast and stream the Golden Globes, an event that functions as a marketing vehicle for the nominated films and a low-stakes party for Hollywood. At last year’s Globes, which aired two weeks before Trump was inaugurated for his second term and several months before David Ellison’s Skydance bought the network, host Nikki Glaser poked fun at Hollywood’s liberal but largely ineffectual politics. “I’m not here to roast you,” Glaser said. “And how could I? You’re all so famous, so talented, so powerful. I mean, you could really do anything — except tell the country who to vote for. But it’s OK. You’ll get them next time!”A spokesperson for Glaser did not respond to a question about whether her set will include political humor this year.Rebecca KeeganRebecca Keegan is the senior Hollywood reporter for NBC News Digital, where she covers the entertainment industry.
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Savewith a NBCUniversal ProfileCreate your free profile or log in to save this articleBy Tom Costello and Phil HelselUPS has grounded its fleet of McDonnell Douglas MD-11’s, the type of plane involved in Tuesday’s deadly crash in Louisville, Kentucky, two sources familiar with the situation told NBC News Friday.UPS did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A photo seen by NBC news showed a screen in a plane that directed pilots to return and which read: “Per UPS MD11 are not to depart effective immediately.” At least 14 people have died in the crash, officials said. The UPS flight, headed from Louisville to Honolulu, crashed around 5:15 p.m. as it was taking off and struck an industrial area near the airport, causing a huge fire and killing the three crew in the plane and others on the ground.A UPS MD-11 cargo plane sits idle on the tarmac on Wednesday at Muhammad Ali International Airport in Louisville, Ky.Michael Swensen / Getty ImagesVideo shows that the left engine of the plane caught fire during takeoff and immediately detached, National Transportation Safety Board member Todd Inman said Wednesday.The NTSB is the lead agency in the investigation.On Friday night, Mayor Craig Greenberg said that the remains of a 14th victim had been found at the crash site.”We pray for each of the victims’ families, and pray that no additional victims were lost as our first responders continue to search and seek answers,” Greenberg said in a video.UPS is the largest employer in the Louisville metro area, with around 25,000 workers. The airport where the disaster happened, Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport, is a main hub for the company’s global air network.Tom CostelloTom Costello is an NBC News correspondent based in Washington, D.C.  Phil HelselPhil Helsel is a reporter for NBC News.
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